Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning
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Governance & Risk Management
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Next-Generation Technologies & Secure Development
Two Experts Discuss Pros and Cons of Using AI in a Zero-Trust Framework
Artificial intelligence gives security teams an edge in zero-trust rollouts by helping them understand who is accessing what and why. Rather than relying solely on manual segmentation and static access reviews, AI helps teams focus their efforts on where they are needed the most to catch unnecessary connections across systems and users.
See Also: Secrets Sprawl Exposes Enterprises to Growing Security Risks
Billy Norwood, CISO at pharmaceutical wholesaler FFF Enterprises, said AI has helped him identify the steps of a zero-trust rollout. “People have done this through segmentation in the past. People have done this through heavy access reviews in the past. But now with AI, we can actually use that information,” Norwood said. “We understand this user does not access this document. We can understand that this system does not actually talk to this other system. And that kind of really helps there.”
Rob LaMagna-Reiter, CISO at life insurer WoodmenLife, advised evaluating AI efficiency. “AI is great for crunching a phenomenal amount of data in a short time, but not all models, as I mentioned, are created equal,” he said. “So, being cognizant of the cost, the token cost, or the compute cost, if you are going to run it internally, or just leverage a third-party via API.”
In this video interview with Information Security Media Group, Norwood and LaMagna-Reiter also discussed:
- Using AI to prioritize zero-trust rollouts based on real system interactions;
- Controlling compute and token costs when running AI models;
- Creating operational frameworks for responsible AI experimentation.
Norwood is a proven security and risk management executive. He has more than 25 years of experience and has excelled at working with multiple businesses to develop, implement and improve comprehensive cybersecurity and risk management programs.
LaMagna-Reiter has more than 18 years of experience in the transportation, government communications, retail, e-commerce, managed services and SaaS industries. He also serves as zero-trust initiative leader for the CyberTheory Institute and is a member of the CyberEdBoard.